My concrete guy is going to hopefully pour concrete this week or next and I have a couple of options on floor drains that I would like opinions on. This will be a heated building in northern Wisconsin. It is really a storage building/workshop and will NOT be used for daily driver cars pulling in and out nor will I be washing cars inside the building. The building has 4 stalls and I want to install an individual drain in each of the four stalls and want to keep the floor as flat as possible with only a minor amount of slope around the each parking stall to its drain. I hope to install a lift in on of the bays in the future and do not want to deal with a lot of slope in the floor. I have three options that have been ok'ed by the building inspector.
1. I can tie them into the city sewer system which is already into the building for the bathroom in workshop portion but each drain would need a sediment trap and a P-trap (I am worried about sewer gas when the P-trap water evaporates because I do not anticipate much if any water going down the drains but want them installed now just in case plans ever change)
2. I can drain out the building to daylight which I have the slope out the back of the building to do but have to install sediment trap drains and deal with cold air coming in through the drains in the winter and a possible rodent access point.
3. I can run the drains to sump pit in the corner where I do not need sediment trap drains (the pit serves a the trap) and can install a sump pump to empty the pit if I ever have water that needs to drain from a car or I wash the garage floors. The water can pump out the back of the building through a pvc pipe out the siding in the same area as where the drain to daylight would be if I choose option 2.
What do you guys think?
1. I can tie them into the city sewer system which is already into the building for the bathroom in workshop portion but each drain would need a sediment trap and a P-trap (I am worried about sewer gas when the P-trap water evaporates because I do not anticipate much if any water going down the drains but want them installed now just in case plans ever change)
2. I can drain out the building to daylight which I have the slope out the back of the building to do but have to install sediment trap drains and deal with cold air coming in through the drains in the winter and a possible rodent access point.
3. I can run the drains to sump pit in the corner where I do not need sediment trap drains (the pit serves a the trap) and can install a sump pump to empty the pit if I ever have water that needs to drain from a car or I wash the garage floors. The water can pump out the back of the building through a pvc pipe out the siding in the same area as where the drain to daylight would be if I choose option 2.
What do you guys think?
